Environmental impacts of repurposing phone booths as COVID-19 sampling stations

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Authors/Editors


Strategic Research Themes


Publication Details

Author listMartin Schoch, Sunaree Lawanyawatna, Shabbir H Gheewala

PublisherTaylor and Francis Group

Publication year2023

JournalInternational Journal of Sustainable Engineering (1939-7038)

Volume number 16

Issue number1

Start page129

End page139

Number of pages11

ISSN1939-7038

eISSN1939-7046

URLhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19397038.2023.2220361

LanguagesEnglish-United States (EN-US)


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Abstract

The presented research examines the repurposing of decommissioned phonebooth units to COVID-19 sampling stations as a meaningful attempt to promote environmentally sustainable and socially resilient cities by contributing to a circular economy transition. The repurposing approach is compared to an adequate new build design using a life cycle assessment to evaluate the environmental implications and a time-cost comparison for their implementation. The results indicate that the remodeling of the phone booth improves environmental performance. The expanded need for refurbishment is offset by the need to use virgin material for the new stations. The benefit of finding reuse for the phone booths and extending their lifetime further supports this understanding, demonstrating the adaptive approach as a viable strategy for utilizing an otherwise disused urban infrastructure with uncertain end-of-life. Cost-time results show that repurposing is less expensive due to the donated phone booths and low production numbers. On the other hand, new sampling stations take less time to produce. Future studies investigate user experiences and social benefits of the realized sampling station based on phone booth repurposing.


Keywords

Adaptive ReuseCOVID-19 Screening StationLife Cycle AssessmentSocial ResilienceTime Cost Analysis


Last updated on 2024-23-02 at 23:05